Hill v. United States Parole Commission

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJune 2, 2017
DocketCivil Action No. 2016-1476
StatusPublished

This text of Hill v. United States Parole Commission (Hill v. United States Parole Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. United States Parole Commission, (D.D.C. 2017).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

ARNOLD J. HILL,

Plaintiff, v. Civil Action No. 16-1476 (JEB) UNITED STATES PAROLE COMMISSION, et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Having spent the last thirty years locked up for strangling an ex-girlfriend, Plaintiff

Arnold Hill is eager to get out. In bringing this action, he asserts that the U.S. Parole

Commission has unfairly blocked his release in a number of ways, including by failing to give

him notice about testimony from the victim’s family, treating him (a District of Columbia

offender) differently from federal prisoners, and rescinding a prior parole grant. Although a

further rehearing is now set for November 2018, Hill is unwilling to linger any longer in limbo.

He has thus filed suit against the USPC and its three Commissioners in their official capacities,

seeking various forms of injunctive and declaratory relief.

Defendants now move to dismiss, contending that Plaintiff’s claims that the proceedings

violated due process and equal protection and reached an arbitrary result cannot break the parole

cycle. This is so. Because Hill’s only avenues to relief involve a further parole hearing or filing

a habeas petition, the Court will grant the Government’s Motion and dismiss the case.

1 I. Background

Hill is an inmate in his mid-sixties serving time for murdering his ex-girlfriend, Shelby

Teresa Duncan, in September 1987. See Mot., Exh. 1 (Sentence Monitoring Computation Data)

at 1. For that crime, the District of Columbia Superior Court sentenced him to an indefinite term

of imprisonment of twenty years to life. Id. Under the District’s old sentencing scheme, this

meant that Hill would first be eligible for parole after serving the bottom number — i.e., twenty

years — and could not serve longer than the top number, which, in this case, was redundant since

it was life. See Warren v. U.S. Parole Comm’n, 659 F.2d 183, 196 (D.C. Cir. 1981) (“Under the

penal theory behind the parole system, [a] sentence [i]s deliberately designed to be indeterminate

within a broad range so that the precise date of his release could be determined by the best

professional judgment [of parole authorities] available at the time of his release as to his

prospects for a law-abiding life, among other things.”). All told, Plaintiff has now been

incarcerated for this murder for almost thirty years. See Computation Data at 2.

Given his twenty-to-life term, Hill first became parole eligible in October 2007. Id.

Although he had been sentenced in a D.C. court for a D.C. Code offense, the U.S. Parole

Commission handled his case, as Congress had abolished the D.C. Board of Parole, largely done

away with local parole, and transferred jurisdiction to the Commission for remaining offenders

by enacting the National Capital Revitalization and Self-Government Improvement Act of 1997,

Pub. L. No. 105-33, § 11231, 111 Stat. 712, 745 (codified at D.C. Code §§ 24-101 et seq.). Over

time, the Commission would consider Hill’s eligibility on numerous occasions, as it is required

to do. See 28 C.F.R. § 2.75(a)(2)(i) (requiring hearings at least every five years where “offense

behavior resulted in the death of a victim”).

2 A. Hearings & Rehearings

The Commission initially conducted a hearing in July 2007 and denied release after

finding that Hill’s parole guidelines recommended at least 26 years’ imprisonment. See Mot.,

Exh. 3 (August 7, 2007, Notice of Action). The agency then scheduled a rehearing for July 2012.

Id.

Apparently realizing thereafter that it should have applied the D.C. Board of Parole’s so-

called “1987 Guidelines,” not the federal ones, the Commission conducted a rehearing earlier

than scheduled in November 2009. Id., Exh. 4 (December 17, 2009, Notice of Action); see ECF

No. 1 (Complaint), ¶¶ 33-34; see also 28 C.F.R. § 2.80(o)(1) (making applicable “1987

guidelines of the former District of Columbia Board of Parole”). The correct Guidelines

recommended current parole, as opposed to at least several more years’ imprisonment, but the

Commission nonetheless denied release, instructed Hill to complete his GED and a 500-hour

drug-abuse program, and then set a further rehearing a year later. See 2009 Notice of Action.

That second rehearing took place in November 2010. See Mot., Exh. 5 (February 11,

2011, Notice of Action). This time, despite a Guidelines recommendation of release (again) and

his compliance with rehabilitative programs, the USPC again denied parole. Id. It informed Hill

that “there is a reasonable probability that you would not obey the law if released and your

release would endanger the public safety.” Id. More specifically, he was a “more serious parole

risk” than the Guidelines suggested because: he was “involved in the strangulation of the victim,

following [his] harassment of her due to the relationship ending,” “[t]he victims’ nude body was

discovered by her children,” and he had “two previous convictions which appear violent in

nature, Assault & Battery and Unlawful Wounding,” the details of which had not been fleshed

out in previous proceedings. Id. Another rehearing was then scheduled in one year’s time. Id.

3 The third rehearing in November 2011 seemed, at first, to be the charm. The

Commission granted parole and set an effective release date of August 7, 2012. Id., Exh. 6

(January 11, 2012, Notice of Action). In doing so, it informed Hill that the “parole effective date

is contingent upon approval of your release plan by the Commission.” Id. (citing 28 C.F.R.

§ 2.82); see 28 C.F.R. § 2.83.

Would that it were so simple. Come February 2012, the USPC learned that Duncan’s

family members wished to testify. Id., Exh. 9 (July 25, 2012, Hearing Summary). When the

Commission receives “new and significant information concerning the prisoner,” 28 C.F.R.

§ 2.75(e) (citing § 2.28), including “adverse information,” id. § 2.28(f), it may reopen any case

for a special reconsideration hearing. That process begins with one Commissioner’s

recommending reconsideration to the others; this referral “automatically retard[s] the prisoner’s

scheduled release date until a final decision is reached in the case.” Id. § 2.28(f). If two

Commissioners concur in a reopening, then a new hearing is set. Id. That is what happened

here. See Mot., Exh. 7 (February 15, 2012, Notice of Action).

In the subsequent, fourth rehearing in July 2012, an examiner heard testimony from

Duncan’s sister and eldest daughter. The sister mentioned how Hill had never given specifics

about how or why he killed Duncan. See 2012 Hearing Summary at 2. And the daughter

discussed how she and her two siblings (10, 6, and 4 years of age back then) were at home

during the crime and how the youngest one discovered their mother’s body the next morning. Id.

at 1, 3. She also testified that Hill had previously threatened to kill Duncan. Id. at 1. Finally,

she objected to his plan to live nearby, in the same Maryland county in which she resided, once

released. Id. at 1.

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